Monday, November 23, 2009

Opinion

How to End the Insurgency and Win the War in Afghanistan

Posted July 17, 2009

With his new book, In the Graveyard of Empires: America's War in Afghanistan, Seth Jones examines the root of the insurgency in that country and how disgruntled rural villagers could mean the difference between American victory and defeat. A longtime Afghanistan expert with the Rand Corp. and an adjunct professor at Georgetown University, Jones spoke with U.S. News this week about how the United States should handle that country. Excerpts:

By the end of the summer, the 21,000 new U.S. troops that President Obama ordered to Afghanistan will be largely in place there, doubling U.S. force levels on the ground. Is this a good idea?
I don't think it was a bad decision. It does without a doubt make it Obama's war. The broader issue is that the larger numbers of U.S. forces may be quite helpful if they can operate with minimal civilian casualties and hold territory, but I don't think it's the answer. The bigger question is, What is the U.S. strategy for leveraging local Afghans? There aren't enough Afghan national security forces, but there are tribes who are willing to patrol their areas.

There is some resistance to enlisting tribal forces for security, however. What are the objections?
In southern Afghanistan [where British forces operate], there has been a British concern that they don't want to contribute to the growth of militia forces. Large militias controlled by warlords in the 1980s contributed to war in the 1990s. What you do see in a range of other cases is that when very local forces are created in a defensive nature at the village level, they tend to be quite legitimate.

The U.S. marines are back in Helmand province in southern Afghanistan. A Marine battalion of 1,000 troops spent six months there, near the town of Garmsir, between May and October 2008. What happened?
When the marines left last October, they were replaced by a relatively small British force and not even an entire Afghan National Army kandak [equivalent to a battalion of approximately 600 soldiers]. The long-term strategy for holding the area was problematic because the hold force wasn't really well thought out. By the time the marines left, shops had opened up in the bazaar. The Brits and the [Afghan National Army] managed to keep a lot of the shops open, but the Brits weren't interested in getting deep into a lot of areas of Garmsir. The key question for the marines now is, What is their presence going to look like a year from now and two years from now? How long are they going to be able to stay? This is something I don't think anyone has their finger on.

Characterize the tension between the U.S. military and the Central Intelligence Agency over CIA Predator drone strikes in Pakistan.
There are some areas [in Pakistan] where the Predators are having a positive impact on a tactical level. They have certainly killed some mid- and senior-level al Qaeda officials, and they have caused a lot of changes in movement of senior al Qaeda officials and disrupted their security. The concern has been civilian casualties, but rather surprisingly, a couple of human-rights groups in Pakistan said the strikes are not killing a lot of civilians. One of the metrics they use is [internally displaced person] flows, and they are not seeing that. But at a strategic level, where they're having a negative impact in Pakistan is the issue of sovereignty. The mainstream, pro-Western Pakistani press sees it as a breach of sovereignty. The Pakistani state intelligence apparatus, the ISI, and the Pakistani military have been broadly supportive of the strikes. But they have asked for a greater say over Predator strikes and intelligence. But this won't happen if the Indian lobby [gets involved]. If the Pakistani military gets the ability to use some of the most sophisticated Predator assets out there, I suspect that would be of deep concern to Indians.

Is it possible to exploit the deep divisions between the Taliban and al Qaeda?
The increasing use of suicide attacks has caused some consternation among members of the Taliban's inner shura [tribal council] that has really tried to put some pressure on al Qaeda to decrease suicide attacks. When you get down to a grass-roots level, there are tribes that are aggrieved at the government but do hate the Taliban. There are a lot of potential fissures.

Reader Comments

thoughts

I am still trying to figure out what the U.S. grand strategy is for Afganistan. We need to remember to start with an endstate but I am not sure what that endstate is for the US in Afganistan. I liked the article and it gave me some ideas about writing a paper at the Air War College, thanks.

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